He wasn’t drafted at all, dropping all the way through to rookie free agency. That made for a rather uncomfortable three-day experience.

“It’s not your choice,’’ said Bray, who eventually signed with the Chiefs and is participating in this weekend’s rookie camp. “You’re not the one sitting around in the draft room picking, so you just wait around. If you don’t get drafted, you pick up the phone and try to find a team and I found a team here in Kansas City.”

Based on ability alone, Bray should have been drafted. He displayed a strong arm at the rookie camp, which concludes today, and at 6-feet-6 and 232 pounds has the classic size that NFL teams look for in a quarterback.

He didn’t get drafted because of a lack of maturity and work habits that were sometimes sloppy. Bray said he may have stayed at Tennessee for his final season had he known he wouldn’t be drafted.

“Who knows?’’ he said. “I’m here now and I’m just trying to move forward.

“I knew I was going to have to earn my way regardless of if I got drafted or not. I’m just looking forward to playing and hopefully learning the system.”

The Chiefs seem to think they got a bargain in Bray by signing him after the draft. He is clearly the most gifted of the three quarterbacks participating in rookie camp, Dayne Crist of Kansas and Alex Gillett of Eastern Michigan being the others.

Bray is the only one among the group under contract to the Chiefs. Crist and Gillett are at camp on a trial basis and the Chiefs, who also have Alex Smith, Chase Daniel and Ricky Stanzi, appear to have no room for another quarterback.

Bray would appear to have an excellent chance to make the regular season roster. Smith and Daniel are the top two quarterbacks with Bray and Stanzi having a shot at the third spot.

Stanzi will have his chance to make his statement to new coach Andy Reid when the Chiefs continue with full squad practices beginning on Tuesday. Bray was making his early move at rookie camp.

“He just needs to continue to improve,’’ Reid said. “That’s what he needs to do, learn the offense, handle it the right way and do the right things. He understands that. He knows the places where he made mistakes at Tennessee. But he also knows he’s a pretty good football player.

“It’s important he learns our system and takes positive steps forward and not negative steps backward.’’

Chiefs safety Sanders Commings, a fifth-round draft pick from Georgia, played against Bray in college. He said he was surprised Bray didn’t get drafted.

“I thought he would be a top-three round guy,’’ Commings said. “This draft this year was pretty crazy, only two quarterbacks in the first two rounds. It was an unfortunate year for the quarterbacks in the draft. I’m glad he’s a Chief. He’s a tremendous athlete, a tremendous quarterback.’’

“I made a lot of mistakes at Tennessee,’’ said Bray, who wouldn’t elaborate. “I had a lot of off the field issues and that could have had something to do with it. Stupid mistakes. I’m here now and I’m a free agent. That’s OK with me. I’m just here to play football.

“Every rookie in the draft has got to prove something. We all knew we weren’t going to come in and start. I’m going coming in to battle. I’m going to try to learn from Alex (Smith). He’s a veteran quarterback and I’m going to try to learn a lot from him.”

1. The Chiefs had eight draft picks on the field, along with 13 undrafted free agents, 36 tryout players and another eight first year players. The practice was light, with lots of instructional time slotted in.

2. Watching practice from the sidelines was GM John Dorsey, who wore shorts and a Chiefs sweatshirt, and Mayor Sly James, who wore a red hat, red shirt and a suit coat.

3. Tyler Bray had a nice deep ball down the right sideline to receiver Robby Toma, who pulled it in as he fell to the ground. Bray also went deep to receiver Darryl Stonum, who had to slow up slightly but did make the catch. After one practice I can report Bray likes to go deep. It was just light practice stuff but he does enjoy flinging it. Bray found receiver Kendal Thompkins for a nice catch along the left sideline, balancing himself to stay in bounds.

4. Funny seeing running back Knile Davis lined up as a receiver on the outside at one point. I don't expect to see that very often.

5. Running back Jordan Roberts limped off the field midway through the practice, but it was just a cramp.

6. Demetrius Harris, the basketball player turned football player, had arguably the catch of the day. On a route across the middle, he caught a cannon of a pass (from Dayne Crist!) across the middle, barely pulling it in on his fingertips. And then since it was no-tackle he ran all the way to the end zone.

7. Harris said he hasn't played football in four years. They just had wristbands to call plays in college so one of his early challenges is getting to know the playbook, which he said was like translating something from Chinese.

8. Bray fumbled it on back-to-back plays. One was a muffed handoff to Knile Davis and another was a botched snap with the center.

9. I really liked what I saw from Travis Kelce. His pass catching skills really shine in an environment like this. I liked how soft his hands looked. The ball fit right in there.

10. Linebacker Josh Martin with the easy dropped interception of the day.

12. Credit to Sean Keeler of Fox Sports for noticing this, but the practice dummy the lineman used had a jersey on it. It was No. 74. That's Eric Winston's old number. (Yes, I'm reading way too much into that but whatever.)